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Post by scout on Apr 30, 2007 9:11:52 GMT -5
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Post by gmoon on Apr 30, 2007 11:47:03 GMT -5
As for the cross assemblers, 64Tass (lin/win/mac) supports the new DTV opcodes. Turbo Macro Pro Assembler (C64/D/PTV) too. Tass works for me--works well. Advantages/disadvantages of various assemblers come up here fairly often (too bad we don't have 'sticky.') I use 'programmers notepad' or PFE in windows. In Linux, depends on which box I'm using (VIM, pico or mcedit if I'm cmding via ssh...gedit does a fine job of syntax highlighting in X.) As for the rest, there are those who use IDEs and those who don't . Never cared for 'em, myself. Majority of the dev work I've done is in GCC, and I love the flexibility. Use whatever you are comfortable with. With the bash history,at the start of a session my scripts are only a few 'cursor ups' away. Less, once I start working. A big advantage is you can distribute the scripts with the source code. It's also kinda tough using an IDE if you're networking into a system elsewhere--I write a lot of my code siting at my desk XP computer, but compile on a Linux box in my workshop. Incidentally, the original poster's question was limited to Linux solutions...
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